institutionalised

listen to the pronunciation of institutionalised
Englisch - Englisch
officially placed in or committed to a specialized institution; "had hopes of rehabilitating the institutionalized juvenile delinquents"
{s} committed to or placed in an institution; transformed into or viewed as an institution (i.e. custom, law, pattern of behavior), institutionalized
given the character of an institution or incorporated into a structured and usually well-established system; "institutionalized graft"; "institutionalized suicide as practiced in Japan"
past of institutionalise
institutionalize
cause to be admitted; of persons to an institution; "After the second episode, she had to be committed"; "he was committed to prison"
institutionalize
to establish as a normal practice
institutionalize
To institutionalize something means to establish it as part of a culture, social system, or organization. The goal is to institutionalize family planning into community life In the first century there was no such thing as institutionalized religion. + institutionalization in·sti·tu·tion·ali·za·tion the institutionalization of social change
institutionalize
in·sti·tu·tion·al·ize institutionalizes institutionalizing institutionalized in BRIT, also use institutionalise1. If someone such as a sick, mentally ill, or old person is institutionalized, they are sent to stay in a special hospital or home, usually for a long period. She became seriously ill and had to be institutionalized for a lengthy period. institutionalized kids with medical problems. + institutionalization in·sti·tu·tion·ali·za·tion Institutionalization was necessary when his wife became both blind and violent
institutionalize
to commit a person to confinement in an institution
institutionalize
{f} transform something into an institution (i.e. custom, law, pattern of behavior); place a person in an institution (also institutionalise)
institutionalised
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